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Magnitude 6 earthquake shakes eastern Turkey

ANKARA, Turkey — A strong earthquake, with a preliminary magnitude of 6, hit eastern Turkey on Monday, knocking down houses in three small villages and killing at least 38 people, an official said.

ANKARA, Turkey — A strong earthquake, with a preliminary magnitude of 6, hit eastern Turkey today, knocking down houses in three small villages and killing at least 38 people, an official said.

Mayor Bekir Yanilmaz, of the nearby town of Kovancilar said the victims were from the villages of Okcular, Yukari Kanatli and Kayali, where the quake toppled stone or mud-brick homes and the minarets of mosques.

The government’s crisis centre said some 60 people were also injured in the quake which occurred at 4:32 a.m. (0232 GMT) in Elazig province and caught many people in their sleep.

It was centred near the village of Basyurt, and was followed by more than 20 aftershocks, the strongest measuring 4.1., according to Istanbul’s Kandilli Observatory seismology centre.

CNN-Turk television said the dead included four young sisters trapped in the rubble. Rescue workers were trying to pull out one other person from debris in Okcular village, it said.

“Everything has been knocked down, there is not a stone in place,” said Yadin Apaydin, administrator for the village of Yukari Kanatli, where he said three villagers died.

The quake was felt in neighbouring provinces of Tunceli, Bingol and Diyarbakir where residents fled to the streets in panic and spent the night outdoors.

Some of the injuries occurred during the panic, when people jumped from windows or balconies. Dogan news agency footage showed people bringing in the injured to hospitals by cars and taxis.

Television footage showed rescue workers and soldiers at Okcular lifting debris as villagers looked on.

Turkey’s Red Crescent organization began setting up tents in the region.

Elazig is some 550 kilometres (340 miles) east of Ankara, the capital.

Earthquakes are frequent in Turkey, much of which lies atop the North Anatolian fault.

In 1999, two powerful earthquakes struck northwestern Turkey, killing about 18,000 people.